0

I have an SSD and a spinning disk. Windows 7 is installed to the SSD, but I have the temporary directory pointed to the spinning disk. I have a replacement for the (quite old) spinning disk. I am going to boot with SystemRescueCD and clone the old disk to the new one. What do I need to do to make Windows recognize the new disk as the old one before I boot Windows again?

1
  • Well, Windows actually assigned the same drive letter to the new drive. I expected it to use a different one since I resized the partition (from 150GB to 1TB). Apr 29, 2011 at 13:01

2 Answers 2

1

Are you just worrying about the drive letter? You can install the disk, and if Windows gives you a different drive letter than you wanted, you can change the drive letter in disk management.

Just go start > run (or search) for diskmgmt.msc

Right click on the drive you just installed, and select Change Drive Letter and Paths...

1
  • I do not want the temporary directory re-assigned to the SSD at any point. Apr 28, 2011 at 22:46
0

I don't think it is a problem to boot Windows with an invalid temporary directory. I've toyed with having the temp folder on a RAM drive before and it did not complain when it was not there. Windows will ignore it until needed or reassign it to the default on C:.

With some luck, windows will give the same letter to your new drive if it's the next available letter (eg D: or E:). Just verify any pointed directory afterwards.

If you want to really be sure, boot your computer with your current drive unplugged and see what happens. In case of problem, replug it and modify your settings.

Edit: Thinking of it, why don't you boot with both disks running. Unmount the drive and map the new one immediately? I am pretty certain this will work just fine assuming no application is using the Temp folder. That said, I still think a plain reboot would work well in most situations.

2
  • The point is that I do not want Windows to re-assign the temp directory to the SSD (the only other disk in the system). Not even temporarily. Apr 28, 2011 at 22:46
  • @jsumners I believe, altough not entirely certain, that windows will not touch this setting. The Temp folder is not system-critical, so application may just give you an error when trying to put files there. To be sure, put the temp folder on a USB stick and do the test. Someone will have to try it out at some point, I think.
    – mtone
    Apr 28, 2011 at 23:23

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .